Dear Visitor(s)
Take into consideration - What if there was no "FREEDOM"?
Then you see this Blog and are reminded that you would be
missing out on so many important things...Enjoy your stay and recommend to your friends to come and taste the "FREEDOM" Geminimay
Wine competition pits France v US | ||||
The contest recreated a tasting 30 years ago in which France was defeated after French experts decided wines from California were better that year. The result was seen as a blow to French national pride and shocked the country's wine industry. In recent years, new world wines have overtaken global sales of French wine. The tasting took place at two locations. One tasting was in London at the Berry Brothers and Rudd wine shop in St James's Street - one of the UK's oldest wine and spirits merchants. The US tasting was held at Copia, the US centre for wine, food and the arts, in the Napa Valley, California, a region famous for its wine production. Nine judges there sampled ten unlabelled glasses of decades-old wines. The combined scores from both panels gave victory to wines from California's Napa Valley. A 1971 Ridge Monte Bello Cabernet from Napa received the highest praise.
"I'm very impressed," said Christian Vanneque, a French judge who was at the original tasting in 1976. "I don't know if I will be able to go back to France," he added. "After a second time, they will kill me." On the European side, the contingent was headed by British wine writer Steven Spurrier, who organised the original tasting. "I expect the outcome to be much friendlier this time," Mr Spurrier said. "The results last time caught the judges off-guard, and I'm afraid many of them reacted rather badly." Landmark tasting Back in 1976, in a contest called Judgment of Paris, nine French experts agreed that the Californian wines they had blind-tasted were better than the French. It was a result that turned the industry in France on its head as well as being a deep blow to French pride, says the BBC's Caroline Wyatt in Paris.
Until then, it had been taken for granted that US wines were never going to improve on the French. The rematch included all the original red wines tasted in 1976 to see how they had aged, as well as newer vintages from both nations. The French wine industry has suffered badly in recent years because of the glut of wine on the world market and strong competition from abroad. Thousands of hectares of vines in France have been destroyed to deal with over-production, with some Bordeaux wines even being turned back into industrial alcohol. To add insult to injury, the world's leading wine critic, Robert Parker, is also an American - and a man whose tastes are irrevocably changing the way some French wines are made, our correspondent adds. | ||||
Sex theme park to open in London | |||
Visitors to Amora - The Academy of Sex and Relationships at the Trocadero in Piccadilly, will pass through seven zones including Pleasure and Orgasm. The 10,500sq-ft exhibit is designed to "separate fact from myth and educate everyone into being better lovers". You have to be aged 18 and over to get in and tickets will cost £15 for the attraction which opens on 7 September. Organisers expect to attract more than 600,000 visitors within the first year.
The theme park will include life-sized silicone-made models which visitors can touch to discover erogenous zones. People will also be able to build their ideal partner from a series of body parts and there will be instructions on how best to kiss and how to talk more sexily. The seven zones will start with attraction, love and relationships and include a sexual well-being zone which looks at the dangers of unsafe sex. The academy's director of exhibits Dr Sarah Brewer said: "The more sex we have the more we want and the less sex we have the more we want. "This academy does push boundaries back and whatever your prowess when you come in we will give you all the information you need to become a fantastic lover." | |||